CME/CE Activity Directors Toolkit · Relevant Boxes Type of Financial Relationship (within the past...
Transcript of CME/CE Activity Directors Toolkit · Relevant Boxes Type of Financial Relationship (within the past...
CME/CE Activity Directors Toolkit:
I. Getting Started: (upon course Kickoff, 7-9 months prior to course date) A. Assign Roles
_____1. Complete your own Financial Disclosure, and direct your planning team members to complete theirs as well
_____2. Read, Understand, Sign and Return the Activity Director Letter of Responsibility _____3. Return all Disclosures immediately to the CME Office _____4. Convene a Curriculum Planning Team meeting _____5. Analyze disclosures for Conflict of Interest, map any needed recusals, find replacements _____6. Identify a Content Validation Reviewer and Conflict Resolution Reviewer and ask them
to execute Reviewer Letters of Responsibility _____7. Verbally contact proposed speakers/ instructors, and collect their Financial Disclosures _____8. Analyze Speaker disclosures for Conflict of Interest and plan for recusals/replacements
B. Develop the Course Proposal _____9. Develop a Timed Agenda for the Course, with topics, timespans, (and speakers if known) _____10. Identify your target audience(s) for the course _____11. Gather/Document your Courses Needs Assessment Data _____12. Develop your Course’s Learning Objectives, specific to your audience’s scope of practice _____13. Design an Outcomes Measurement strategy (assessment, quiz, test, survey, chart-audit)
C. Develop a funding plan for your Course: _____14. Estimate course expenses (large costs are speakers, travel, meals/venue rental, printing) _____15. (Optional) Identify grantors/sponsors and target dollars for each _____16. (Optional) Identify prospective paid exhibitors and target sales revenue _____17. Identify registration pricing levels. _____18. Project a Break-Even Budget including all estimated expenses and revenues _____19. Choose a Financial Management Model for your Course (more info here)
II. Submit your Course Accreditation Application to the CME office (6-7 months prior) _____20. Consider an accreditation verbal Interview, but bring all the above materials _____21. Apply for other and non-physician credit types (ANCC, CEU, MOC, other clinical CE) _____22. Be available to answer follow-up questions from the CME office, and await the
determination of the CME Office of eligibility(2 weeks) for the credits requested
CME/CE Activity Directors Toolkit:
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III. Upon receiving your credit notification from the CME Office (but not before), D. Plan and Promote your Course (5 months prior to course)
_____23. Book your venue, _____24. Rent commercial mailing lists of target audiences, if appropriate _____25. Send all speakers/instructors a Confirmation Letter, with presentation and assessment
due dates, speaker expectations, and conflict resolution procedures _____26. Finalize your agenda, Design brochure, website, and any other course promotion
materials (4 month prior to course) _____27. Contact your Fundraising Team in the CME office and provide them with ALL of the
above items, to be used to construct a successful academic grant-writing campaign _____28. Open registration on the course website _____29. CME Office exclusively submits all grants, receives and disburses all grant awards.
Activity Director and content planners are not permitted do this. _____30. CME Office exclusively contracts with all paid exhibitors. Activity Director and content
planners are not permitted to do this. _____31. Print your brochures (3 months prior to course) _____32. Develop Course format and optimize layout of the instructional venue for active learning
E. Content Validation (1 month prior to course) _____33. Collect Speaker Presentations _____34. Review for Commercial Independence _____35. Assign to Reviewer for Content Validation _____36. Assign Assessments for Peer Review _____37. Resolve Conflicts of Interest, and request speakers modify presentations as needed _____38. Produce final versions of presentations that communicate disclosures or lack thereof _____39. Produce final version of assessments, quizzes, polls, tests _____40. Confirm with Vendors and suppliers (Two weeks prior to course) _____41. Finalize Catering Contracts _____42. (if provided)Finalize Lodging, Travel, transportation _____43. Finalize Course Audiovisual plan
F. On the Course Date _____44. Register, check-in, or attest attendance from all participants _____45. Monitor vendors for code of conduct, and separation of promotion from education _____46. Supervise speaker adherence to timed agenda _____47. At exit or within 24 hours, send Evaluation survey and assessment to learners
G. Post-Course (< 30 days after course ) _____1. Reconcile all expense and income to budget _____2. Analyze tabulated evaluations and determine learning outcomes attained _____3. Meet with planning team to convey survey results and debrief on next-cycle
improvements
Required Content Validation Steps for CME activities1. ___prior to Course receiving CME recognition, Activity Director completes Financial
Disclosure a) ___If Activity Director has Commercial Relationships that are relevant to the teaching
content, this constitutes a Conflict of Interest(COI), therefore s/he must appoint an Independent Reviewer who has NO financial relationships, who will perform Content Validation.
• ___ Independent Reviewer must complete a Financial Disclosure prior to being appointed to review.
• ___ Independent Reviewer must NOT be involved in the CME content as planner or speaker
b) ___ If Activity Director is unconflicted, s/he may perform the required Content Validation, following steps on the Content Validation Policy and Form, and COI Resolution. Content Validation and COI Resolution, including directing that speakers must remove biased or commercial content, should occur 1 week prior to activity.
c) ___ Disclosures for all parties, including those with “Nothing to Disclose”, must be conveyed to learners in advance of content delivery, and listed on course promotion flyer.
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Department: Office of Academic Affairs
Continuing Medical Education
Policy: CME Content Validation and Definition
of CME Content
1. Preamble
As an ACCME-accredited educational provider, NYU Winthrop Hospital shall remain in
compliance at all times with ACCME requirement that “Accredited providers are
responsible for validating the clinical content of CME activities that they provide”
A. Specifically, all the recommendations involving clinical medicine in a CME
activity must be based on evidence that is accepted within the profession of
medicine as adequate justification for their indications and contraindications in
the care of patients.
B. All scientific research referred to, reported, or used in CME in support or
justification of a patient care recommendation must conform to the generally
accepted standards of experimental design, data collection and analysis.
Providers such as NYU Winthrop are not eligible for ACCME accreditation or
reaccreditation if they present activities that promote recommendations, treatment, or
manners of practicing medicine that are not within the definition of CME, or known to
have risks or dangers that outweigh the benefits or known to be ineffective in the
treatment of patients. An organization whose program of CME is devoted to advocacy of
unscientific modalities of diagnosis or therapy is not eligible to apply for ACCME
accreditation. Therefore, Winthrop shall avoid and eliminate advocacy of unscientific
modalities.
Definition of CME: Continuing medical education consists of educational activities
which serve to maintain, develop, or increase the knowledge, skills, and professional
performance and relationships that a physician uses to provide services for patients, the
public, or the profession. The content of CME is that body of knowledge and skills
generally recognized and accepted by the profession as within the basic medical sciences,
the discipline of clinical medicine, and the provision of health care to the public.
In all areas where NYU Winthrop written policy is silent, ambiguous, or non-dispositive,
staff shall follow the latest version ACCME Accreditation Criteria 7 SCS1.
Procedural requirements
All CME Content must be reviewed (prior to activity occurring) for clinical content
validation by a qualified clinician or scientist. This should be the Course Activity
Director, her/his supervising clinical chair or designee of that chair, or a qualified house
office of PGY-3 or higher. Clinical Content Review shall be documented using the
Clinical Content Review Attestation Form.
Date Issued: June 2018
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Steps to Operationalize the Peer Review Requirement:
A. Peer reviewer must be appointed by the CME office
B. Peer reviewer cannot have any relevant commercial relationships
C. Peer reviewers may not have a direct-reporting employment relationship to
any author, speaker or activity director in control of CME course content. (This
includes house staff when materials to be reviewed were authored by their
supervising program faculty)
D. Peer reviewers must have adequate time to conduct peer review:
1. Authors must submit materials to CME office 3-4 weeks prior to course date
(No “night-before” slides syndrome!)
2. CME office must provide review materials to content reviewer 3 weeks prior
to course date
3. Content Reviewer must submit completed reviewer feedback at least 1-2
weeks prior to course date
4. COI management shall be completed by CME office 1 week prior to course
date
Content Reviewer Duties include examination of presentations using four standards:
Evidence Based Science, Fair-Balance, Non-commercial, Non-promotional. Specific
examination duties of the Content Review shall document that the reviewer was able to:
A. Attest whether Presentation does or does not contain a prefatory disclosure slide:
B. Attest whether Presentation does or does not contain brand names or product
logos of commercial Tx, Rx or Dx or devices used in diagnosing or treating
patients
C. Attest whether Presentation does or does not use scientific or general class names
when referring to commercial products
D. Attest whether Presentation promotes or emphasizes any branded product over its
market peers and competitors and biosimilars or bioequivalents
E. Attest, when overemphasis on a branded product is found, whether the speaker
discloses a relationship with this product’s manufacturer?
F. Attest whether Presentation makes off-label recommendations, referencing uses
of drugs or devices for indications not approved by FDA
G. Describe any off-label product uses that are reference
H. Attest whether Presentation cites published source evidence (preferably in peer-
reviewed reference) for each scientific assertion it makes
I. Annotate where published evidence or citation for assertions is lacking.
Date Revised: February 2019
Addendum Approved By CPE Governance Committee: Feb 5, 2019
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CME-CE Annual Disclosure Form
For Faculty, Planners, Course Directors, Managers, and Independent Reviewers of Content (ACCME Required)
Name _______________________________________Mobile Phone_____________________
E-mail _____________________ Title of Presentation:________________________________
Affiliation/Title/Institution(attach a CV please):______________________________________
Live Presentation Date: ____________ _____Online Module Start Date: _________________
Please indicate your role in this CME-CE activity:
Speaker Planner/Activity Director Independent Reviewer (ICR)
A. DISCLOSURESHave you (or your spouse/partner) had a relevant financial relationship with, and/or received or anticipate any form of remuneration
from, in the last 12 months with any entity producing, marketing, re-selling, or distributing health care goods or services consumed by,
or used on, patients?
Yes No If “YES”, please list your disclosures:
B. ATTESTATIONS/DECLARATIONS: Initial below to acknowledge/ agree to ALL items
____As a planner, I will ensure that any speakers or content I suggest is independent of commercial bias.
____As a planner, I will recuse myself from planning activity content in which I have a conflict of interest.
____In my role as a planner or speaker at a Winthrop-accredited CME-CE activity, I agree to plan/ present only valid, balanced,
independent, objective, and scientifically-based educational content that is free of commercial bias and influence. I agree to comply
with all ACCME Standards of Commercial Support and all Federal requirements to protect health information under the Health
Insurance Portability & Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA). I agree to resolve any relevant conflicts of interest that the CME Office
identifies via this disclosure prior to the activity, and to comply with ACCME, ANCC and Winthrop CME-CE compliance policies.
____ As a speaker, I agree to disclose to learners any discussion of unapproved products or devices, or off-label use of FDA approved
products or devices.
Signature____________________________________________________Date___________
Please return completed form to: Peter Sandre, Office of CME, 222 Station Plaza North, Suite 510 or via scan and email to
Check
Relevant
Boxes
Type of Financial Relationship
(within the past 12 months)
Include spousal/life partner relationships
Indicate Applicable Healthcare Manufacturers or
Commercial Entities by Name
Salary, Royalty, or Honoraria
Receipt of Intellectual Property Rights / Patent Holder
Consulting Fees (e.g., advisory boards)
Speakers’ Bureaus
Supported/Contracted Research
Ownership Interest (stocks, stock options, or other
ownership interest excluding diversified mutual funds) Required by
WUH Policy Indicate the dollar amount of remuneration from the
above relationships for the past 12 months.
$
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Peer Reviewer Documentation Form (page 1 of 4)
Name of Peer Reviewer:____________________________________________
Email of Peer Reviewer:_____________________________________________
Name of CME Activity: _____________________________________________
Date of CME Activity: _____________________day,_____/______/20____.
Date Content Review is Assigned: ____________day,_____/______/20____.
Date Content Review is Due for Completion: ________day,_____/______/20____.
Scope of Review
Reviewer is assigned ___Slide Presentations authored by: ___________________@_____________.____
Reviewer is assigned ___Assessment Questions, authored by: ________________@_____________.____
Learning Objectives of the activity:_____________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________________
Peer Reviewer Attests that (please initial next to each item to attest)
________1. This Presentation ___does/___does not contain a prefatory disclosure slide.
________2. This Presentation ___does/___does not contain brand names or product logos of commercial
Tx, Rx or Dx or devices used in diagnosing or treating patients.
________3. This Presentation ___does/___does not use scientific or general class names when referring to
commercial products, drugs and devices.
________4. When mention of a branded product is found in the presentation, the speaker ___has/___has not
disclosed a relationship with this product’s manufacturer.
a. Please list all slide numbers wherein a branded product name, logo, or manufacturer
appears _____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
________5. This Presentation ___does/___does not make off-label recommendations for drug or device
indications unapproved by FDA
a. Describe any off-label product uses that are referenced in the presentation, and the slide or
page number: ________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
________6. This Presentation ___does/___does not promote or emphasize any branded product over its
market peers, competitors, biosimilars or bioequivalents. If so, list the slide numbers where this
appears:_____________________________________________________________________
________7. This Presentation cites published source evidence (preferably in peer-reviewed reference) for
each scientific assertion it makes
a. Please list all slide numbers where therapeutic asserts lack citation:
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________ (continued, next page)
Peer Reviewer: Please
complete pages 3, 4 , and 5
for EACH presentation
you’ve been assigned to
review.
NYU Winthrop Hospital Office of Academic Affairs Continuing Medical Education August 2017
CME-CE RESOLUTION OF CONFLICT OF INTEREST and Content Review Attestation Return to Office of Academic Affairs Prior to the Activity
Activity:____________________________________________________Date:_______________
Faculty Name:___________________________________________________________________
Title of Presentation:_____________________________________________________________
Name of Reviewer:_______________________________________________________________
A. CONTENT VALIDATION:
The faculty member will submit presentation materials in advance to allow for adequate peer review.
I reviewed the CME-CE presentation and it meets all the following criteria: a) content is valid and aligned with the interests of the public; b) all recommendations involving clinical medicine are based on the best available evidence and referenced; c) all scientific research referred to, reported, or used in the CME-CE activity in support or as justification of patient care recommendations conforms to the generally accepted standards of experimental design, data collection and analysis.
B. CONFLICT RESOLUTION: I have reviewed the speaker’s individual disclosure statement and resolved his/her conflicts of interest by the following methods (Check all that apply):
The faculty member will or have divested his/herself from this financial relationship.
The relationship(s) disclosed were determined not to be relevant to the CME-CE presentation.
I have assigned the faculty member to present on a different topic.
Elimination: I have eliminated the speaker from participating in the CME-CE activity.
The faculty member will recommend an alternative presenter for this topic for the planning committee’s consideration.
I have altered, or directed the speaker to alter, the CME-CE content of the presentation, including recommendations for patient care, to conform to WUH content validation standards stated above.
The faculty member will refrain from making recommendations, regarding products or services, unless all relevant products or services applicable to the same procedure or treatment are presented in an unbiased manner.
Other Resolution mechanism (please describe): Is the faculty member approved as speaker/instructor for the activity? � Yes � No Signature of Reviewer: I attest to the accuracy of this form and the integrity of the content as complying with ACCME standards. __________________________________________Date:_________________________ Activity Director or Delegate
The ACCME Standards for Commercial Support: Standards to Ensure Independence in CME Activities℠
STANDARD 1: Independence 1.1 A CME provider must ensure that the following decisions were made free of the control of a commercial interest. (See www.accme.org for a definition of a "commercial interest" and some exemptions.)
(a) Identification of CME needs; (b) Determination of educational objectives; (c) Selection and presentation of content; (d) Selection of all persons and organizations that will be
in a position to control the content of the CME; (e) Selection of educational methods; (f) Evaluation of the activity. 1.2 A commercial interest cannot take the role of non-accredited partner in a joint provider relationship.
STANDARD 2: Resolution of Personal Conflicts of Interest 2.1 The provider must be able to show that everyone who is in a position to control the content of an education activity has disclosed all relevant financial relationships with any commercial interest to the provider. The ACCME defines “’relevant’ financial relationships” as financial relationships in any amount occurring within the past 12 months that create a conflict of interest.
2.2 An individual who refuses to disclose relevant financial relationships will be disqualified from being a planning committee member, a teacher, or an author of CME, and cannot have control of, or responsibility for, the development, management, presentation or evaluation of the CME activity.
2.3 The provider must have implemented a mechanism to identify and resolve all conflicts of interest prior to the education activity being delivered to learners.
STANDARD 3: Appropriate Use of Commercial Support 3.1 The provider must make all decisions regarding the disposition and disbursement of commercial support. 3.2 A provider cannot be required by a commercial interest to accept advice or services concerning teachers, authors, or participants or other education matters, including content, from a commercial interest as conditions of contributing funds or services.
3.3 All commercial support associated with a CME activity must be given with the full knowledge and approval of the provider. Written agreement documenting terms of support 3.4 The terms, conditions, and purposes of the commercial support must be documented in a written agreement between the commercial supporter that includes the provider and its educational partner(s). The agreement must include the provider, even if the support
is given directly to the provider’s educational partner or a joint provider. 3.5 The written agreement must specify the commercial interest that is the source of commercial support. 3.6 Both the commercial supporter and the provider must sign the written agreement between the commercial supporter and the provider. Expenditures for an individual providing CME 3.7 The provider must have written policies and procedures governing honoraria and reimbursement of out-of-pocket expenses for planners, teachers and authors.
3.8 The provider, the joint provider, or designated educational partner must pay directly any teacher or author honoraria or reimbursement of out-of–pocket expenses in compliance with the provider’s written policies and procedures.
3.9 No other payment shall be given to the director of the activity, planning committee members, teachers or authors, joint provider, or any others involved with the supported activity.
3.10 If teachers or authors are listed on the agenda as facilitating or conducting a presentation or session, but participate in the remainder of an educational event as a learner, their expenses can be reimbursed and honoraria can be paid for their teacher or author role only.
Expenditures for learners 3.11 Social events or meals at CME activities cannot compete with or take precedence over the educational events. 3.12 The provider may not use commercial support to pay for travel, lodging, honoraria, or personal expenses for non-teacher or non-author participants of a CME activity. The provider may use commercial support to pay for travel, lodging, honoraria, or personal expenses for bona fide employees and volunteers of the provider, joint provider or educational partner.
Accountability 3.13 The provider must be able to produce accurate documentation detailing the receipt and expenditure of the commercial support. STANDARD 4: Appropriate Management of Associated Commercial Promotion 4.1 Arrangements for commercial exhibits or advertisements cannot influence planning or interfere with the presentation, nor can they be a condition of the provision of commercial support for CME activities.
4.2 Product-promotion material or product-specific advertisement of any type is prohibited in or during CME activities. The juxtaposition of editorial and advertising material on the same products or subjects must be avoided. Live (staffed exhibits, presentations) or enduring
ACCME Standards for Commercial Support: Standards to Ensure Independence in CME ActivitiesSM© 2004, 2005, 2014 by the ACCME®
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(printed or electronic advertisements) promotional activities must be kept separate from CME.
• For print, advertisements and promotionalmaterials will not be interleafed within the pages ofthe CME content. Advertisements and promotionalmaterials may face the first or last pages of printedCME content as long as these materials are notrelated to the CME content they face and are notpaid for by the commercial supporters of the CMEactivity.
• For computer based CME activities, advertisements and promotional materials will not be visible on the screen at the same time as the CME content and not interleafed between computer ‘windows’ or screens of the CME content. Also, ACCME-accredited providers may not place their CME activities on a Web site owned or controlled by a commercial interest. With clear notification that the learner is leaving the educational Web site, links from the Web site of an ACCME accredited provider to pharmaceutical and device manufacturers’ product Web sites are permitted before or after the educational content of a CME activity, but shall not be embedded in the educational content of a CME activity. Advertising of any type is prohibited within the educational content of CME activities on the Internet including, but not limited to, banner ads, subliminal ads, and pop-up window ads.
• For audio and video recording, advertisementsand promotional materials will not be included withinthe CME. There will be no ‘commercial breaks.'
• For live, face-to-face CME, advertisementsandpromotional materials cannot be displayed ordistributed in the educational space immediatelybefore, during, or after a CME activity. Providerscannot allow representatives of Commercial Intereststo engage in sales or promotional activities while inthe space or place of the CME activity.
• For Journal-based CME, None of the elementsof journal-based CME can contain any advertisingor product group messages of commercialinterests. The learner must not encounteradvertising within the pages of the article or withinthe pages of the related questions or evaluationmaterials.
4.3 Educational materials that are part of a CME activity, such as slides, abstracts and handouts, cannot contain any advertising, corporate logo, trade name or a product-group message of an ACCME-defined commercial interest.
4.4 Print or electronic information distributed about the non-CME elements of a CME activity that are not directly related to the transfer of education to the learner, such as schedules and content descriptions, may include product-promotion material or product-specific advertisement.
4.5 A provider cannot use a commercial interest as the agent providing a CME activity to learners, e.g., distribution of self-study CME activities or arranging for electronic access to CME activities.
STANDARD 5: Content and Format without Commercial Bias 5.1 The content or format of a CME activity or its related materials must promote improvements or quality in healthcare and not a specific proprietary business interest of a commercial interest.
5.2 Presentations must give a balanced view of therapeutic options. Use of generic names will contribute to this impartiality. If the CME educational material or content includes trade names, where available trade names from several companies should be used, not just trade names from a single company.
STANDARD 6: Disclosures Relevant to Potential Commercial Bias Relevant financial relationships of those with control over CME content 6.1 An individual must disclose to learners any relevant financial relationship(s), to include the following information: • The name of the individual;• The name of the commercial interest(s);• The nature of the relationship the person has with
each commercial interest.6.2 For an individual with no relevant financial relationship(s) the learners must be informed that no relevant financial relationship(s) exist. Commercial support for the CME activity 6.3 The source of all support from commercial interests must be disclosed to learners. When commercial support is ‘in-kind’ the nature of the support must be disclosed to learners.
6.4 ‘Disclosure’ must never include the use of a corporate logo, trade name or a product-group message of an ACCME-defined commercial interest. Timing of disclosure 6.5 A provider must disclose the above information to learners prior to the beginning of the educational activity.
ACCME Standards for Commercial Support: Standards to Ensure Independence in CME ActivitiesSM© 2004, 2005, 2014 by the ACCME®
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ACCME Accreditation Requirements 626_20190412
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ACCREDITATION CRITERIA Initial applicants seeking to achieve Provisional Accreditation, a two-year term, must comply with Criteria 1,
2, 3, and 7–12. Providers seeking full Accreditation or reaccreditation for a four-year term must comply
with Criteria 1–13. Providers also have the option to aim to achieve Accreditation with Commendation, a six-
year term. Providers that are receiving accreditation decisions through November 2019 have the choice of
using either Option A: Commendation Criteria (C16-C22) or Option B: Menu of Commendation Criteria (C23-
C38) to seek Accreditation with Commendation. Providers that will receive accreditation decisions after
November 2019 must use Option B to seek Accreditation with Commendation. More information on
Accreditation with Commendation options is available here.
Criterion 1 The provider has a CME mission statement that includes expected results articulated in terms
of changes in competence, performance, or patient outcomes that will be the result of the program.
Criterion 2 The provider incorporates into CME activities the educational needs (knowledge, competence,
or performance) that underlie the professional practice gaps of their own learners.
Criterion 3 The provider generates activities/educational interventions that are designed to change
competence, performance, or patient outcomes as described in its mission statement.
Criterion 4 This criterion has been eliminated effective February 2014.
Criterion 5 The provider chooses educational formats for activities/interventions that are appropriate for
the setting, objectives, and desired results of the activity.
Criterion 6 The provider develops activities/educational interventions in the context of desirable
physician attributes [eg, Institute of Medicine (IOM) competencies, Accreditation Council for Graduate
Medical Education (ACGME) Competencies].
Criterion 7 The provider develops activities/educational interventions independent of commercial
interests. (SCS 1, 2, and 6).
Criterion 8 The provider appropriately manages commercial support (if applicable, SCS 3 of the
ACCME Standards for Commercial SupportSM).
Criterion 9 The provider maintains a separation of promotion from education (SCS 4).
Criterion 10 The provider actively promotes improvements in health care and NOT proprietary interests of
a commercial interest (SCS 5).
Criterion 11 The provider analyzes changes in learners (competence, performance, or patient
outcomes) achieved as a result of the overall program's activities/educational interventions.
ACCME Accreditation Requirements 626_20190412
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POLICIES SUPPLEMENTING THE STANDARDS FOR COMMERCIAL SUPPORT
COMMERCIAL EXHIBITS AND ADVERTISEMENTS
Commercial exhibits and advertisements are promotional activities and not continuing medical
education. Therefore, monies paid by commercial interests to providers for these promotional activities are
not considered to be commercial support. However, accredited providers are expected to fulfill the
requirements of SCS 4 and to use sound fiscal and business practices with respect to promotional activities.
COMMERCIAL SUPPORT: ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The provider’s acknowledgment of commercial support as required by SCS 6.3 and 6.4 may state the
name, mission, and areas of clinical involvement of an ACCME-defined commercial interest but may
not include corporate logos and slogans.
COMMERCIAL SUPPORT: DEFINITION AND GUIDANCE REGARDING WRITTEN
AGREEMENTS
Commercial Support is financial, or in-kind, contributions given by a commercial interest which is used to
pay all or part of the costs of a CME activity.
When there is commercial support there must be a written agreement that is signed by the commercial
interest and the accredited provider prior to the activity taking place.
An accredited provider can fulfill the expectations of SCS 3.4 - 3.6 by adopting a previously executed
agreement between an accredited provider and a commercial supporter and indicating in writing their
acceptance of the terms and conditions specified and the amount of commercial support they will receive.
A provider will be found in Noncompliance with SCS 1.1 and SCS 3.2 if the provider enters into a
commercial support agreement where the commercial supporter specifies the manner in which the
provider will fulfill the accreditation requirements.
ACCME Accreditation Requirements 626_20190412
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DEFINITION OF A COMMERCIAL INTEREST
A commercial interest is any entity producing, marketing, re-selling, or distributing health care goods
or services consumed by, or used on, patients. The ACCME does not consider providers of clinical
service directly to patients to be commercial interests - unless the provider of clinical service is owned, or
controlled by, an ACCME-defined commercial interest.
A commercial interest is not eligible for ACCME accreditation. Commercial interests cannot be
accredited providers and cannot be joint providers. Within the context of this definition and
limitation, the ACCME considers the following types of organizations to be eligible for accreditation and
free to control the content of CME:
• 501-C Non-profit organizations (Note, ACCME screens 501c organizations for eligibility. Those
that advocate for commercial interests as a 501c organization are not eligible for accreditation in
the ACCME system. They cannot serve in the role of joint provider, but they can be a commercial
supporter.)
• Government organizations
• Non-health care related companies
• Liability insurance providers
• Health insurance providers
• Group medical practices
• For-profit hospitals
• For profit rehabilitation centers
• For-profit nursing homes
• Blood banks
• Diagnostic laboratories
ACCME reserves the right to modify this definition and this list of eligible organizations from time to
time without notice.
DISCLOSURE OF FINANCIAL RELATIONSHIPS TO THE ACCREDITED PROVIDER
Individuals need to disclose relationships with a commercial interest if both (a) the relationship is financial
and occurred within the past 12 months and (b) the individual has the opportunity to affect the content
of CME about the products or services of that commercial interest.
FINANCIAL RELATIONSHIPS AND CONFLICTS OF INTEREST
Financial relationships are those relationships in which the individual benefits by receiving a salary,
royalty, intellectual property rights, consulting fee, honoraria for promotional speakers’ bureau, ownership
interest (e.g., stocks, stock options or other ownership interest, excluding diversified mutual funds), or other
financial benefit. Financial benefits are usually associated with roles such as employment, management
position, independent contractor (including contracted research), consulting, speaking and teaching,
membership on advisory committees or review panels, board membership, and other activities from which
remuneration is received, or expected. ACCME considers relationships of the person involved in the
CME activity to include financial relationships of a spouse or partner.
The ACCME has not set a minimum dollar amount for relationships to be significant. Inherent in any amount
is the incentive to maintain or increase the value of the relationship.
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With respect to personal financial relationships, contracted research includes research funding where
the institution gets the grant and manages the funds and the person is the principal or named investigator
on the grant.
Conflict of Interest: Circumstances create a conflict of interest when an individual has an opportunity to
affect CME content about products or services of a commercial interest with which he/she has a financial
relationship.
The ACCME considers financial relationships to create actual conflicts of interest in CME when
individuals have both a financial relationship with a commercial interest and the opportunity to affect the
content of CME about the products or services of that commercial interest. The ACCME considers
“content of CME about the products or services of that commercial interest” to include content about
specific agents/devices, but not necessarily about the class of agents/devices, and not necessarily
content about the whole disease class in which those agents/devices are used.
With respect to financial relationships with commercial interests, when a person divests themselves of
a relationship it is immediately not relevant to conflicts of interest, but it must be disclosed to the learners
for 12 months.
VERBAL DISCLOSURE TO LEARNERS
Disclosure of information about relevant financial relationships may be disclosed verbally to participants at
a CME activity. When such information is disclosed verbally at a CME activity, providers must be able to
supply the ACCME with written verification that appropriate verbal disclosure occurred at the activity. With
respect to this written verification:
1. A representative of the provider who was in attendance at the time of the verbal disclosure must
attest, in writing:
a. that verbal disclosure did occur; and
b. itemize the content of the disclosed information (SCS 6.1); or that there was nothing to
disclose (SCS 6.2).
2. The documentation that verifies that adequate verbal disclosure did occur must be completed
within one month of the activity.